Blind shots are part of golf. They can be wonderful. They exist on the best of designs. I wonder if there are places they should be considered, well... ill-considered.
Certain courses may be classified as destination golf. Sure there are locals playing regularly but the resorts basically exist for the golf tourist. Blind shots on these courses bother me as typically I'm playing the course for the first time. At best, I'm on my third or fourth round. If I'm standing over a shot and I simply have no idea what to do it very much takes away from the experience. A good stragegy (never mind result) on such a hole depends on (a) engaging a caddie (b) pulling a Padraig or (c) pure luck. I have no problem with such shots on a course designed primarily for its members or the local community. I don't enjoy having a blind hole on a course explicitly created for visitors.
Obviously there are some great blind holes around the world and some of them are even on courses designed with a different audience in mind and which are now destination courses. I'll throw out a few holes and ask for your thoughts. You'll probably notice I contradict myself a bit. Some holes are just fantastic no matter what
Lahinch #5. Great hole. You have the rock to aim at and a miss has to be brutally bad in order to be punished. Granted, the wind can hammer a good shot but the hole is so obvious a fit on that course I find myself loving it.
Pebble Beach #6. I've played it once and I ended up on the right side of the fairway. I had no caddie and was carrying my bag. Hiking up to figure out the line of the shot simply wasn't possible from an delay perspective. I'm sure it's a great hole (you can't beat the location) but it disappointed me. I felt I had to hit a very conservative safety shot. It took much of the strategy out of the hole. If I'd played it 5-6 times I'm sure I would think it a great hole. #8 is similar but the blind shot is off the tee so everyone is in prime position from the get go. The rock and/or player assistant is there to point you in the right direction. A much different situation.
Bandon Trails #14. I've lurked here for a few weeks and know many of you like this hole. I've played it once and it ruined the round for me. Obviously from the top of the hill you know where your tee shot needs to end up but that's easier said than done for this player. I ended up on the right half of the fairway and made a complete bollocks of the hole because I simply didn't have a clue what shot was in order. If an approach is going to be brutally penal it should at least be right in front of you. On a destination course that is.
Trails was built for tourists. That entire place exists to serve guys flying in to play. I have to assume that course has far more first time players than the national average. That being the case I feel that hole has no business being on that course.
Just a noob here with a thimble full of knowledge and five gallons of interest. Be gentle.